Heim v. Ressel

143 N.W. 823, 162 Iowa 75
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 143 N.W. 823 (Heim v. Ressel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heim v. Ressel, 143 N.W. 823, 162 Iowa 75 (iowa 1913).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

Unfortunately the record is in a very confused state, and appellees’ counsel have not seen fit to make any argument, although they have filed two amendments to [77]*77the abstract, which have tended to confuse rather than clarify. The suit seems to be upon the following instrument:

Know all men by these presents, that Gustaf Eessel and his wife, Augusta Eessel, of the county of Allamakee and state of Iowa, in consideration of the sum of ($315.00) three hundred and fifteen dollars, in hand paid by Nicholas Myer, in the county of Allamakee and state of Iowa, do hereby sell and convey unto the said Nicholas Myer and to his heirs and assigns, the following described premises, to wit: The north half of the northeast quarter of section eighteen (18), township ninety-six (96), range three (3) west of the 5th P. M., containing eighty acres more or less.
The intention being to convey hereby an absolute title in fee, including all rights of homestead to have and to hold the premises above described with all appurtenances thereto belonging unto the said Nicholas Meyer or his heirs, executors or administrators to be void upon a condition that the said Gustaf Eessel and his wife, Augusta Eessel, pay to said Nicholas Meyer or his heirs three hundred and fifteen dollars, in the sums and at the times herein specified, to wit: One hundred dollars to be paid November 15, A. D. 1897, interest 8 per cent. One hundred and fifteen dollars to be paid November 15, A. D. 1898, interest 8 per cent. One hundred dollars to be paid November 15, A. D. 1899, interest 8 per cent.
Signed the 3d day of December, A. D. 1896, Gustaf Eessel. Augusta Eessel. In presence of John J. Broderick.

This instrument was duly acknowledged, and upon the back thereof was the following indorsement: “Pay to the order of Peter and Frank Heim. Nicholas Meyer.”

An action between these same parties evidently involving some collateral matter reached this court some years ago, and was decided in an opinion which is reported in 153 Iowa 356. That case seemed to be to recover an alleged loan of $100 made by Peter and Frank Heim to defendants on or about May 2, 1905. It seems that the alleged loan was made at the time that the present defendants claim to have paid the indebtedness sued on in this case. The opinion just referred to was in review of a petition for a new trial by the plaintiffs therein [78]*78of an action in which the jury returned a verdict for the defendants. Plaintiffs’ theory of the present case as presented by the petition is not only that the instrument set out contained a direct promise to pay, but that (and we here quote from the petition) :

Par. 4. The indorsement set out in paragraph 2 upon the back of said instrument was placed thereupon by Nicholas Meyer on or about the 12th day of August, 1902, at which time the said Nicholas Meyer sold, assigned, and transferred the indebtedness evidenced by the said instrument in writing by writing the indorsement upon the back of said instrument, and by delivering the said instrument to the plaintiffs, that became and has ever since been their property, and the indebtedness evidenced and secured thereby became and has ever since and is now their property.
Par. 6. The plaintiffs admit that the interest has been paid in full to December 3, 1901, and that the item of $115, due November 15, 1898, has been paid in full, and that the defendants have paid to apply on the interest since this indebtedness became the property of plaintiffs $24, and no more.

The prayer was for judgment for the amount of the indebtedness “set out herein,” with a decree for the foreclosure of the instrument as a mortgage.

Because of a dispute in the record, we have been compelled to go to the transcript in order to discover just what the trial was about. As we understand it, plaintiffs claim that the mortgage or deed in suit was given to Meyer, the grantee therein, to secure the sum of $315, borrowed from him at about the time the instrument bears date; the indebtedness being evidenced by three notes, the last maturing some time in the year 1899. Some time in the year 1898, or perhaps a little later, a threshing machine company obtained judgment against the defendant Gus Ressel for the sum of $325. All of the interest on the mortgage indebtedness down to some time in August of the year 1902, with $115 of the principal, was paid to Meyer, the mortgagee. Desiring the balance of the principal, he pressed defendants for payment, and it is [79]*79claimed that Mrs. Ressel (her husband then being away from home) went to the plaintiffs to obtain a loan of $200 whereby to satisfy the Meyer mortgage. At any rate they furnished her money, and Meyer’s indebtedness was satisfied, and Meyer canceled the mortgage on the margin of the county records on October 4, 1902, and it is claimed by defendants that the notes and the mortgage given to secure them were turned over to Mrs. Ressel. Some time after this some one representing the plaintiffs asked Mrs. Ressel to make a mortgage upon the property in controversy to secure the $200 loan made to her or to her and her husband. Pursuant to this request they went to an attorney at Waukon, who, it seems, had the threshing machine judgment for collection, and he represented that, if a new mortgage was made, the judgment would become prior thereto, and that the judgment would have to be paid. Consequently no new mortgage was made. Shortly thereafter one of the plaintiffs, or some one representing them, asked to see the old Meyer mortgage, and the parties then went to a neighboring justice of the peace, and after some negotiations and pursuant to his advice made the following entry: “For a valuable consideration the within mortgage is hereby asigned by me to Frank Hyme this 12th day of August, 1902.-. Before Patrick Cahalan, Justice of the Peace.” The instrument was then delivered to the Heims. Thereafter the full indorsement was made upon the back of the instrument as appears in the statement heretofore made. Defendants or one of them paid the interest on the $200 Heim loan for the years 1902 to 1904, and receipts were given for these payments. As the judgment against Ressel was not paid, the attorney pressed them for payment, and finally offered to compromise and settle it for $140; but plaintiffs’ representative undertook to settle it for $100. It seems that plaintiffs were interested in getting this judgment set-led because they found it was prior to their claim under the mortgage. Defendants claim that they accepted this proposition to settle for $100, and it is claimed they also wanted [80]*80the mortgage indebtedness settled, and after figuring the amount due on the $200 loan the parties all went to see the attorney who had the judgment for collection. It is claimed by defendants that they took from $350 to $375 with them to satisfy the judgment and the claim* for borrowed money, and that they, on that day, to wit, May 2, 1905, paid plaintiffs the amount due them, with interest. It is also claimed that at this time the defendants practically settled the judgment; Ressel paying in all the sum of $105, and securing a satisfaction of this judgment in so far as he was concerned. Plaintiffs have an entirely different version of the matter. They say that, instead of receiving any money on the day in question in payment of their loan, they in fact furnished the Ressels with $100 of the money used to pay the judgment, and that they received not a cent on their previous loan.

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Bluebook (online)
143 N.W. 823, 162 Iowa 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heim-v-ressel-iowa-1913.